Liquidambar styraciflua L., also known as sweetgum, is an understory hardwood species that has widespread distribution in the southeast USA, especially in pine plantations. In addition to being a possible biorefinery feedstock, sweetgum contains shikimic acid, which is a precursor for the drug Tamiflu®. Sweetgum bark was extracted with 65 °C water and yielded 1.7 mg/g of shikimic acid, while sweetgum de-barked wood yielded 0.2 mg/g of shikimic acid. Because shikimic acid can be extracted with water, the coupling of the phytochemical hot water extraction with dilute acid pretreatment was examined. The addition of a 65 °C shikimic acid extraction step coupled to pretreatment with 0.98% H2SO4 at 130 °C for 50 min resulted in 21% and 17% increases in xylose percent recovery from bark and de-barked wood, respectively. These results indicate that, in addition to recovering a high value product, the 65 °C wash step also increases xylose recovery.
| Authors: |
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Elizabeth Martin, Julie Duke, Mathew Pelkki, Edgar C. Clausen, Danielle Julie Carrier |
| Journal: |
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Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology
|
| Year: |
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2010 |
| DOI: |
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10.1007/s12010-010-8947-7 |
| Publication date: |
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27-05-2010 |